Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe
New Thrills...New Marvels, New Wonders New Thrills!...New Marvels, New Wonders
A mysterious plague, the Purple Death, ravages the earth. Dr. Zarkov, investigating in his spaceship, finds a ship from planet Mongo seeding the atmosphere with dust. Sure enough, Ming the Merciless is up to his old tricks. So it's back to Mongo for Flash, Dale, and Zarkov.
Trailers & Videos

Flash Gordon Conquers the Universe (1940) | Trailer | Buster Crabbe | Carol Hughes
Cast

Buster Crabbe
Flash Gordon

Carol Hughes
Dale Arden

Charles Middleton
Emperor Ming

Anne Gwynne
Sonja

Frank Shannon
Dr. Zarkov

John Hamilton
Professor Gordon

Herbert Rawlinson
Dr. Frohmann

Tom Chatterton
Professor Arden

Shirley Deane
Princess Aura

Lee Powell
Captain Roka

Roland Drew
Prince Barin

Don Rowan
Captain Torch

Edgar Edwards
Captain Turan

Michael Mark
Professor Karm

Earl Dwire
Janda

Harry C. Bradley
Keedish

Byron Foulger
Professor Drok

William Royle
Captain Sudan

Donald Curtis
Ronal (uncredited)

Luli Deste
Queen Fria (uncredited)
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Reviews
talisencrw
I love and have a great affinity for serials from the golden age of cinema, and this was definitely one of the better ones I have seen. Previously, I had really enjoyed Buster Crabbe's presence in the post-Weissmuller era of Tarzan, and I have had the DVD of Hodges' 1980 'Flash Gordon' for eons, but wanted to first get to the root of the phenomenon by checking out the serials. Fortunately, in purchasing a 50-film pack, 'Nightmare Worlds' from Mill Creek, it was included.
The 12 episodes of the 220-minute serial were well-edited into the fine flow that this version I saw had, and the special effects and production values were quite decent--you could tell it had been made both by a high-quality studio, in Universal, and by directors quite used to the serial format, in Ford Beebe and Ray Taylor.
There are some goofs (for example, when Ming's henchmen are looking at a mountainside for the four protagonists, and five are shown), but it's action-packed, with interestingly stylized wipe-edits, and I can see how it later influenced the likes of both George Lucas and Steven Spielberg.
As well, it's very interesting how the filmmakers were subtly able to use the film to offer social commentary to the growing Nazi/Fascist movements worldwide that were wreaking havoc across the globe in the Axis of Evil. Heartily recommended to anyone who enjoys the fun side of cinema.
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